Machine Learning Fairness in Justice Systems: Base Rates, False Positives, and False Negatives

08/05/2020
by   Jesse Russell, et al.
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Machine learning best practice statements have proliferated, but there is a lack of consensus on what the standards should be. For fairness standards in particular, there is little guidance on how fairness might be achieved in practice. Specifically, fairness in errors (both false negatives and false positives) can pose a problem of how to set weights, how to make unavoidable tradeoffs, and how to judge models that present different kinds of errors across racial groups. This paper considers the consequences of having higher rates of false positives for one racial group and higher rates of false negatives for another racial group. The paper examines how different errors in justice settings can present problems for machine learning applications, the limits of computation for resolving tradeoffs, and how solutions might have to be crafted through courageous conversations with leadership, line workers, stakeholders, and impacted communities.

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